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Raiders aiming for third straight win, strong start in region play

Habersham Central High School quarterback Carson Parker (4) directs his offense against Stephens County High School on August 18, 2023 in Mt. Airy. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

After getting off to a less-than-ideal start with a pair of losses to neighboring county schools, Habersham Central High School’s football team has turned things around and the potential upside to the season is still ahead of them.

The Raiders (2-2) went on the road to Central Gwinnett in Week 4 and came back to Mt. Airy with a 17-10 win over the Knights. They followed that with a 28-10 home win over Forsyth Central last week to close out their non-region schedule.

Now, on Friday night, a big offense stands in the way of a third-straight win and a 1-0 start to the six-game region slate.

“I think we’re ready (for region play),” Habersham Central Head Coach Benji Harrison said. “I think you have those four (non-region) games for a reason – to measure and to see what you need to improve in and you see who you are as a football team. I think we have a good idea.”

The Raiders will travel to Sugar Hill Friday night to face Lanier.

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The Longhorns (3-1) have been strong on the offensive side of the ball, averaging over 35 points per game. On the other side, they’ve only allowed 24 points per game.

“Nothing glances out at you as, ‘OK, here’s their weaknesses,’” Harrison said. “I don’t think they have a lot of weaknesses.”

The head man said his offense can help his defense keep points off the board by sustaining their own offensive drives. 

“They’ve been very explosive offensively, so I think we, offensively, can help with that,” Harrison said. “We’ve got to sustain drives and put long drives together and limit their possessions. Any time you’re going against an offense that’s scored as many as they have, you want to keep them off the field.”

Habersham Central will have to contend with a duo of running backs in senior Tayo Ashadele and junior Tojuan Peyton Jr.

Ashadele has carried the ball 61 times for 432 yards and five touchdowns. Peyton Jr. has covered 302 yards and scored twice on 43 carries.

If the Raiders crowd the box to deal with the run game, senior quarterback Preston Ratliff (53-of-84, 814 yds, 8 TD) can hurt them over the top. 

“I think, offensively, they do a really good job of being balanced,” Harrison said. “I think they have the ability of being able to throw the football and run the football, which makes it more challenging defensively. You can’t just take one away because they can hurt you with the other.”

Harrison pointed to senior Chase Jameson as one of the weapons the Longhorns can utilize against his defense.

Jameson has 13 carries for five touchdowns in the run game. He also has 24 catches for 448 yards and five touchdowns in the passing game. The next closest player in receptions has eight. The next closest player in yards has 120. Three other players have caught a touchdown pass.

“He’s a really good player,” Harrison said. “We’ve got to have a plan for him and know exactly where he’s at in the formation so we’ve kind of got an idea of what he’s about to do.”

As for it being the first region game of the season, Harrison said it could do a lot for his team.

“You get six of them. Obviously if you can get that first one, it helps you a lot and you’d beat a team that’s traditionally been in the top 3 in the region every year,” Harrison said. “It’d be a big win.”

Prior to Week 4 against Central Gwinnett with his team sitting at 0-2, Harrison said he encouraged his team to keep the focus inward on themselves rather than listening to what others might be saying outside the program. Playing for each other became a rallying point.

“Nobody knows what goes on except the guys on our team, so play for each other. Stay tight and don’t let the doubts creep in,” Harrison said of his message. “Just believe in each other and believe in what we’re doing. They did and they do.

“They knew it was early in the season. They knew exactly how good this football team can be,” he continued. “When everybody else maybe wavered, they didn’t because they knew and they still believed in what we were doing.”

Now the Raiders will prepare to start that region slate on the road.

Away games have been equally harsh to and beneficial for Habersham Central. The second game of the year was on the road against White County – a 34-6 loss. Two weeks later, with a bye in between, the Raiders topped Central Gwinnett.

“I don’t think that matters,” Harrison said of playing away from John Larry Black Field. “You like playing at home because you’re in front of the home crowd and the energy is a little bit higher. But if you can’t get your own energy up for the first region game against a good football team, you’ve got bigger problems than that.

“We’ve won at home, we’ve lost at home. We’ve won on the road, we’ve lost on the road,” he continued. “I think our kids are excited and they’re ready to go on the road. We feel like we got started turning our season around on the road.”

Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. Friday in Sugar Hill.

North Hall’s Marsh turning broken hand into fuel for senior season

North Hall High School quarterback Tanner Marsh (right) gets the play call from head coach Sean Pender on September 15, 2023 against East Hall High School at The Brickyard in Gainesville. (Zack Myers/NowHabersham.com)

When most people think of high school quarterbacks, they generally aren’t picturing the toughest guy on the field. If one of those guys breaks a finger on their throwing hand halfway through the season, they’re done for. Put them on the sideline. Let them hold a clipboard and cheer on their teammates.

North Hall High School senior quarterback Tanner Marsh takes exception to that notion. Matter of fact, he is an exception to that notion.

WHO IS TANNER MARSH?

If you ask the guy himself, he’ll quickly tell you he was born in Athens and moved to Smyrna. Then, in second grade, he moved again to the North Hall area.

He’s the youngest of the three kids – he has a brother and sister and his sister is getting married.

His parents are divorced and have both remarried and he loves both of the people his parents married.

He’s not a homebody. He’s always making plans to get out of the house and hang out with friends on the golf course or the lake.

He’s a self-professed “alright” golfer with a personal best score of 88, but finding time to play is keeping him from getting better. When asked about the game, he plays because his dad does and he’s just trying to “get like him.”

If you ask senior linebacker Zeke Harris, Marsh is a leader.

Senior tight end Breckan Kirby says he’s a guy who will cut up with you when it’s time, but “knows when to lock in and get the job done.”

To senior wide receiver Ryals Puryear, he’s “more like a brother than anything else.”

Head coach Sean Pender sums up Marsh in a single word: Dude!

THE CHANGE

Pender took over at North Hall in January 2022 and, before that – as a sophomore – Marsh was a wide receiver with aspirations of throwing passes instead of catching them.

“All this stuff happened and Pender came and I was like, ‘OK, here’s my shot. Let’s go see if I can make it happen,’” Marsh said. “When Pender got here, we started working and I started seeing progression.”

Pender said he was expecting Marsh to be an outside linebacker or a tight end going into his junior year. 

Actually, Pender was looking at other candidates to fill that starting quarterback slot.

“I was looking at other kids to play quarterback,” Pender said. “He wasn’t really high on my radar in the very beginning as a quarterback. He was high on my radar as a kid that worked really hard.”

That work ethic bought Marsh a chance. When he approached Pender with the idea, the Trojans’ new head coach gave him a shot.

“He just kept improving and getting better and better and better,” Pender said. “By the end of summer last year, he won the starting job.”

THE START

In his first game as the starter, North Hall lost to White County, 35-14, in Cleveland.

Marsh completed 14-of-25 attempts for 128 yards and he threw an interception. On the ground, he was his team’s leading rusher in the contest with 12 carries for 91 yards and a touchdown.

In Marsh’s words, the game “was a nightmare.”

In his home opener, Marsh was 11-of-24 for 171 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. The Trojans lost 30-13.

Maybe the third game is the charm? Not this time.

North Hall fell 38-20 to Walnut Grove at home.

Marsh threw for 150 yards and a touchdown and ran for another score. The silver lining – no interception.

Then the cross-county rivalry with East Hall put the Trojans back on the road.

“East Hall hit and I was like ‘Alright, let’s see if I can make something happen,’” Marsh said. “I remember coming into that game with not really any kind of mentality, just trying to prove myself, honestly. I did very good there.”

Marsh connected on 10-of-15 passes for 192 yards, three scores and an interception. On the ground, he added 72 yards and two touchdowns.

In a hard-fought game against Cherokee Bluff, Marsh threw a touchdown to Puryear and ran for another. The Trojans won 14-12.

THE BREAK

With a 2-3 record, 1-1 in region play, North Hall traveled to Bogart to play North Oconee.

“They were definitely an intimidating team, but you never want to go into any game with doubt,” Marsh said.

Marsh said his offense was shut down on the first drive. Then on the second drive they had a “great drive and scored.”

It was the third drive when his junior season would be altered.

“Things are starting to click. He’s starting to find his rhythm,” Kirby said. “Then he breaks his hand.”

“I think it was on a third down play,” Marsh said. “I tried to scramble out and my finger got caught in a face mask. I tried to push him down on the ground and then snap.”

ACCEPTANCE

With adrenaline pumping, Marsh didn’t feel his finger break.

When the Titans got the stop, the offense went to the sideline to prepare for their next drive.

“I went on the sideline and my finger was completely going the other way,” Marsh said. “I’m trying not to freak out. I was trying to bend it like everything’s going to be alright.”

As the reality of his season potentially being over settled in, Marsh said the first 15 minutes were “pretty sad” knowing he couldn’t be out on the field helping his team.

“It was devastating for us,” Puryear said. “Right after that, we’re on the sidelines and defense is out there, so I had time to process it. I look over and see Walker (Davis) and I’m like, ‘OK, Tanner’s hurt, he’s down, but we’ve still got to play. We’ve still got a game going on.’

Davis, the team’s backup quarterback, was a freshman at the time. 

After sitting around on the sidelines for a bit thinking about his situation, Marsh helped his team the only way he could.

“I thought, ‘Oh shoot, Walker’s in. That’s a freshman at quarterback against North Oconee. I need to go do something. I can’t keep sitting here looking at this hand,’” Marsh said. 

Marsh became Pender’s shadow on the sideline. When a play call went in from the head coach, the junior was there talking to the freshman. In timeouts, Marsh was there coaching up the youngster the best he could in the moment and giving words of encouragement.

Davis only threw the ball seven times for 16 yards in the game. The Trojans were held to 55 rushing yards and they lost the game, 70-7.

A “DUDE”

The next day, Marsh went to the doctor and got his finger set and arm in a cast. The whole weekend he was talking to Pender figuring out what he can do to help his team now.

“The doctor said it was going to be a six or seven week injury. I was out the rest of the season for sure,” Marsh said. “[Pender and I] talked on the phone, Madison (County) was a big region game we needed to win.”

“We had a group chat last year, I think it was the Saturday after the game and he went and got a cast on it and was like ‘I’m coming to play defense,’” Harris recalled. “We were all like, ‘Oh, you’re just joking.’”

Monday, Marsh showed up with a cast on his arm. Since he couldn’t throw the ball, he would get it wrapped up into a big “club” and made the switch to play linebacker.

“Instead of breaking his hand and sulking, he clubs it up and goes and plays the rest of the year on the defensive side of the ball,” Pender said. “When you’ve got a quarterback that has that type of mentality and a team-first like, ‘You know what, I’m not letting my team down. If I can’t throw the ball, I could go out there and stop somebody from scoring.’ He just had that kind of mentality.

“That’s the kind of kid you want to lead your team,” he continued.

Marsh said he spent the whole first week just soaking up all he could about the defensive side of the ball.

“He was really good. Just had a feel for the game,” Kirby said. “He knew where to be at the right time.”

In his first game on defense, Marsh tied for the team-high in solo tackles, was third in total tackles, registered a sack and forced two fumbles.

He finished the season with 23 total tackles in those final four games.

“When I say he’s a dude, you have people that have an ‘it’ factor about them, you know who they are when they walk in the room,” Pender said. “Tanner, he has that type of leadership mentality. When he opens his mouth, the team listens. He’s got the respect of his teammates.”

THE LEADER

When Marsh made the decision to club up and flip to the defensive side of the ball and help his team at all costs, that helped him gain that respect.

“That just shows he’s willing to do whatever it takes to get a win for the team,” Kirby said. “He’s willing to club up his hand, tape it all up and get out there and get the job done.”

Outside of making that switch, Marsh is also very uplifting to his teammates when they make mistakes like missing blocks or dropping passes. The lack of negativity draws his teammates to him.

“Whenever we’re at practice or in a game, no matter what, if we’re having a good game or a bad game, he’s always talking to us and lifting everybody up,” Puryear said. “Whenever we’re having bad days, bad games, he’ll come up to us one-on-one and just be like, ‘Dude, you’re doing great. Calm down, relax.’ Just words of encouragement.”

Pender said it really doesn’t matter the situation and what his teammates do.

“We have a pretty tough coaching staff. We, as coaches, ride our players pretty tough and demand a lot out of them,” Pender said. “Tanner, when a receiver drops a pass – Tanner could be under duress, scrambling around and drop a dime to a receiver and the receiver could drop it. Where a lot of quarterbacks would get frustrated and say something to the receiver in a negative manner, Tanner never does that.”

THE RETURN

Marsh got his cast off last winter and has been throwing with Pender since that day. Part of that return has been proving himself.

His first game back as the signal caller in the regular season was a 49-34 win over White County. He’s followed that with a 40-7 win over Dawson County, 28-6 win over Walnut Grove and 49-14 win over East Hall.

In those four games, he’s completed 66-of-90 attempts for 828 yards, 11 touchdowns, and one interception. He’s also rushed for 266 yards and five touchdowns.

Marsh’s 266 yards on the ground is second on the team and his five scores is tied for the team lead.

Still, that White County game is one Marsh won’t be forgetting any time soon.

“Oof. Yeah, that was fun. I was glad to be back,” Marsh said. “White County, we came out, everybody on our team was coming out hot. Everybody was fired up for it. You could just tell energy was in the air. [The Brickyard] was packed out. That was probably one of the funnest games I’ve played in my whole career.”

Marsh and the Trojans hope to keep rolling the senior season on a high when they travel to Oakwood to face Cherokee Bluff Friday at 7:30 p.m.

Motorcyclist taken to hospital after wreck near high school

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Habersham County EMS transported a motorcyclist to the hospital on Thursday after he wrecked near Habersham Central High School in Mt. Airy.

The wreck happened at 1:45 p.m. on Thursday, September 21, at the GA 197 South and Camp Creek Road intersection.

According to the crash report from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office, 67-year-old Chris Kubik of Hoschton, Georgia, was attempting to stop at the intersection when he lost control of his motorcycle. Kubik laid the bike over on its side, deputies say. The motorcycle slid approximately 25 feet into the middle of the intersection.

An ambulance transported Kubik non-emergent to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville for treatment.

Christopher Gary “Chris” Moore

Christopher Gary “Chris” Moore, age 41, of Royston, Georgia, passed away on Thursday, September 21, 2023.

Mr. Moore was born on October 5, 1981, in Habersham County, Georgia. He was preceded in death by his sister, April Diane Moore; maternal grandparents, Hazel and Eugene Brown; paternal grandparents, Frank Moore and Alice Ward; uncles, Marvin Brown and Doug Moore.

Chris was an avid hunter and enjoyed hunting wild hogs the most. He was currently employed with Kendall Tree Service. Chris will be remembered as a loving father, son, brother and uncle.

Survivors include his wife, Toni Moore, of Danielsville; mother, Sybil Juanita Quiroz, of Royston; father, Gary Allen Moore, of Alto; additional parents, Harold and Velma Franklin, of Cornelia; daughter, Hailey Moore, of Royston; sons, Dawson Moore, of Royston; Gavin Moore, of Danielsville; David Moore, of Royston; brothers, Jacob Moore, of Toccoa; Eugene Moore, of Royston; sisters, Syble Rebecca Sanchez, of Cornelia; Debbie Moore, of Buford; additional siblings, Robby Franklin, Maitha Chambers; numerous nieces and nephews; one great-niece and two great-nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, September 24, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, September 23, 2023, at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made in Chris’ Memory to Whitfield Funeral Homes, P.O. Box 1113, Cornelia, Georgia 30531, to assist the family with final expenses.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123

Thomas Boyd Fry

Thomas Boyd Fry, age 74, of Cleveland, Georgia, went home to be with the Lord on Thursday, September 21, 2023.

Born in Clarkesville, Georgia, on April 16, 1949, he was a son of the late Charles Osco & Evelyn Free Fry. Boyd served his country proudly in the United States Army. He was a poultry farmer and of the Christian faith. In his spare time, Boyd enjoyed watching football & the NASCAR races. He also made sure to keep his kids in line.

In addition to his parents, Boyd was preceded in death by his son, Michael Thomas Fry, and by his brother, Lloyd Fry.

Survivors include his loving wife of 55 years, Shirley Ouzts Fry of Cleveland, GA; son & daughter-in-law, James Charles & Frances Hunnicutt Fry of Cornelia, GA; grandchildren, T.C. Fry & Taylor Fry of Toccoa, GA; Logan Fry & Ragan Fry of Cornelia, GA; brother & sister-in-law, Dwight & Sandra Fry of Cleveland, GA; sisters & brothers-in-law, Edith & Reed Alley, Eunice & Billy Welborn, Brenda & Doug Gosnell all of Clarkesville, GA; numerous nieces, nephews, great-nieces, great-nephews, cousins, other relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 4:00 p.m. Sunday, September 24, 2023, at Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville, with Rev. Kenneth McEntire officiating.

Boyd’s wishes were to be cremated following the service. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 2:00 p.m. until the service hour on Sunday, September 24, 2023.

An online guest registry is available for the Fry family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care & professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

More than 130 NGHS volunteers honored at annual luncheon

Northeast Georgia Health System CEO Carol Burrell presents the Marjorie Covington Smith Auxilian of the Year Award to Sally Veatch at the annual volunteer awards luncheon. (Photo by NGHS)

Patients who visit one of Northeast Georgia Medical Center’s (NGMC) campuses are likely familiar with Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS) Auxiliary volunteers – always donning their red shirts. They can be seen at information desks, in waiting rooms, walking the halls with volunteer therapy dogs and doing crafts with pediatric patients.

These volunteers provide comfort and guidance to patients and visitors every day, and for that, they were recognized this week at the 2023 Volunteer Appreciation and Auxiliary Membership Luncheon.

The luncheon was held at the Ramsey Conference Center at Lanier Technical College.

Auxilian of the Year: Sally Veatch

NGHS presented the Marjorie Covington Smith Auxilian of the Year Award to Sally Veatch. Veatch, a member of the auxiliary board and Marketplace committee, serves most often in the NGMC Gainesville Window Shops, welcoming and assisting customers. Veatch began volunteering almost 16 years ago and has contributed over 4,000 hours of service.

“The greatest attributes of our Auxilian of the Year aren’t measured in hours of service,” said Diane Stephens, past president of the NGHS Auxiliary. “They are measured by the laughter she inspires, the joy she gives through her storytelling, her willingness to help with any project and her absolute love for the health system. Sally embodies those most important traits.”

Volunteer of the Year: Gordon Rink

Burrell with Gordon Rink, recipient of the 2023 Joan Kosmala Volunteer of the Year Award. (Photo by NGHS)

The health system recognized Gordon Rink with the Joan Kosmala Volunteer of the Year Award. The award was named for a long-time volunteer who served as a member of the auxiliary board as both vice president and president. Inspired to serve after the passing of his wife of 46 years, Rink has served with Hospice of Northeast Georgia Medical Center (NGMC) since 2016. He is known for his quiet demeanor and warm smile, as well as his willingness to fill any role.

“Gordon will say yes to any task,” said Jennifer Sorrells, supervisor of bereavement services with Hospice of NGMC. “Grief seminars, remembrance services, administrative tasks, bagging kitty litter for medicine disposal, cutting ribbons and tying hundreds of bows – these are just a few of the services he has provided throughout his time with hospice.

Patient Friend Award: Diane Champa

Diane Champa received the Nell Wiegand Patient Friend Award. The award was named for Nell Whelchel Wiegand, who was instrumental in helping bring NGMC Gainesville to the community and served in many volunteer roles, including president of the NGHS Auxiliary and founding chair of the NGHS Foundation. Champa was recognized for exemplifying NGHS’ core values; respectful compassion, responsible stewardship, passion for excellence and deep interdependence. She has served as a patient friend in the emergency department at NGMC Braselton since 2016.

Diane Champa and NGHS CEO Carol Burrell. Champ received the Nell Wiegand Patient Friend Award. (Photo by NGHS)

“It gives me such joy, visiting with patients, giving comfort to them when they are anxious or worried,” Champa said.

Champa is known for approaching each shift with joy, extending a warm and kind smile, a cheerful greeting, words of encouragement and an attitude of empathy.

In all, 131 volunteers reached service milestones during the past year, including Lee Highsmith for 40 years of service and Virginia Benefield for 35 years of service.

Sheriff’s office warns of paving scam

As the saying goes, “If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.” That’s the message the White County Sheriff’s Office is sending to residents about a paving scam.

According to a post on the sheriff’s office’s Facebook page, law enforcement has received reports of someone selling “left-over” asphalt, willing to lay it for a fraction of the price.

“The person/company is then only completing a portion of the work after taking full payment,” the post states.

Others have reported similar scams in Jackson and Habersham counties.

The White County Sheriff’s Office asks anyone who is contacted by this type of operation to notify authorities.

Buford man faces charges in child molestation case

Investigators with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) have arrested a Buford man in a child molestation case.

Brandon Lewis Taylor, 33, remains in the Hall County Jail without bond following his arrest on Tuesday, Sept. 19. He has been charged with felony child molestation.

Taylor is accused of the ongoing molestation of a female victim under the age of 16. The suspect and the victim are known to one another.

The investigation is ongoing

Biden administration to create new gun violence prevention office

More than a thousand people, including many teenagers, showed up to the Tennessee Capitol calling for lawmakers to address gun violence after six people were killed — including three children — in a mass shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville in March 2023. (Photo by Tennessee Lookout)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — The White House Thursday announced the formation of an Office of Gun Violence Prevention that will help states and local governments as they implement a gun safety legislative package President Joe Biden signed into law last year.

Lacking additional action in Congress to curb gun violence, “the Office of Gun Violence Prevention, along with the rest of my Administration, will continue to do everything it can to combat the epidemic of gun violence that is tearing our families, our communities, and our country apart,” Biden said in a statement.

Following mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas, Congress passed the most comprehensive federal gun safety legislation in nearly 30 years, known as the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act.

In Buffalo, a white supremacist targeted a Black neighborhood and killed 10 Black people in a grocery store. And in Uvalde, 19 children and two teachers were murdered, making it the second-deadliest mass shooting since the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in 2012.

There will be a formal announcement of the office Friday in the Rose Garden that survivors of gun violence from Buffalo, Uvalde, Sandy Hook and other mass shootings are expected to attend, Stefanie Feldman, who will lead the office, said on a call with reporters.

Feldman said Vice President Kamala Harris will oversee the office and that the office will also help coordinate support for communities impacted by gun violence.

“We know true freedom is not possible if people are not safe,” Harris said. “This epidemic of gun violence requires urgent leadership to end the fear and trauma that Americans experience every day.”

There have been 506 mass shootings this year alone, according to Gun Violence Archive, an organization that tracks gun violence in the U.S.

Shutdown inches closer as House fails to pass defense bill, lawmakers exit D.C.

The U.S. Capitol (Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — U.S. House Republicans were unable for a third time Thursday to begin debate on the Defense funding bill, throwing another wrench into Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s leadership tenure.

The 212-216 vote that rejected the rule for the $826 billion Defense spending measure was unexpected, coming less than a day after House GOP lawmakers gathered in a room in the Capitol basement to broker a path forward.

Arizona Rep. Eli Crane and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Rome, Georgia, switched their votes to oppose the rule after voting on Tuesday to adopt it. Colorado Rep. Ken Buck and South Carolina Rep. Ralph Norman both supported adoption of the rule on Thursday after opposing it earlier in the week.

Other Republicans voting no included Andy Biggs of Arizona, Dan Bishop of North Carolina, and Matt Rosendale of Montana. The rule would have allowed the House to begin officially debating the bill and voting on nearly 200 amendments.

RELATED: What to expect if the government shuts down

The failed vote led McCarthy to reverse course on the schedule, with many lawmakers heading home for the weekend on Thursday instead of sticking around for votes throughout the weekend. McCarthy had said exactly one week ago “When we come back, we’re not going to leave. We’re going to get this done.”

The update to the House schedule sent around Thursday afternoon said, ”ample notice will be given ahead of any potential votes tomorrow or this weekend.”

The stalemate and change of plans do not bode well for efforts to approve the short-term spending bill that’s needed to stave off a partial government shutdown when the new fiscal year begins Oct. 1.

McCarthy has yet to unify his members amid deep disagreements about how much the federal government should spend and what policy restrictions should be included in full-year bills as well as the stopgap measure.

The ongoing dispute has ground the House chamber to a halt as McCarthy searches for a way to unify his razor-thin majority without turning to Democrats to pass a bipartisan bill.

Arkansas Republican Rep. Steve Womack, a senior appropriator, said Thursday that his fellow lawmakers need to accept the Senate will re-work any partisan bills the House sends over.

“Remember, this is all going to go to the Senate, so people don’t need to get real hot and bothered over where we are today,” Womack said. “It’s going to be based on what comes back and whether or not it can get to the floor.”

Discussions among House Republicans, he said, are likely to become “heated” once the Senate re-works a short-term spending bill and sends it back to the House for a final approval vote.

Infighting and political differences within the House Republican Conference have so far prevented GOP lawmakers from reaching agreement on their opening offer on a short-term spending bill, which is also called a continuing resolution or CR.

Defense spending bill falters

Before the Thursday vote, McCarthy had been somewhat optimistic the House could finally approve the rule and begin debate on the full-year Defense spending measure.

Greene wrote on X that she switched her vote “because they refused to take the war money for Ukraine out and put it in a separate bill.” The rule approved 184 amendments for floor debate and votes, including one from Florida’s Matt Gaetz that would have prohibited “security assistance for Ukraine.”

Crane wrote on X on Thursday that he believes votes “on CRs, omnibus bills and raising the debt ceiling should never take place.”

“I’m going to do whatever I can to change the way this place works,” he wrote.

Oklahoma Republican Rep. Tom Cole, chair of the Rules Committee, switched his vote on Thursday to a no vote after voting yes a few minutes earlier. The procedural maneuver allows him to bring the rule back up for a vote at a later time.

The whip count error appeared to be a surprise for Defense Appropriations Chair Ken Calvert, a California Republican; ranking member Betty McCollum, a Minnesota Democrat; and staff — all of whom were seated at the tables on the House floor ready to lead debate on the measure.

The Republican table held thick white binders as well as a large accordion folder, all filled with paperwork and the Democratic table was stacked with paperwork as well. It’s highly unlikely that staff would have brought all the materials needed to debate the bill and amendments if they knew the rule vote was going to fail.

‘At least a short-term shutdown’

In addition to strong disagreement among House Republicans about the full-year spending bills, the House GOP Conference has yet to solidify a plan to pass the short-term stopgap spending bill that’s needed to hold off a funding lapse.

Idaho Republican Rep. Mike Simpson, chair of the Interior-Environment spending subcommittee, said he expects there will be “at least a short-term shutdown” as the House and Senate try to reach agreement on a short-term spending bill.

“That’s a lot of work to do in a very short time,” Simpson said.

House Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry, a Pennsylvania Republican, said Thursday that he hasn’t seen details on any new short-term spending bills that might come to the floor.

“I haven’t seen the language of any additional CR,” he said.

Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran, the top Republican on the Commerce-Justice-Science spending panel, said he’s “hoping the House chaos is set aside.”

“I keep saying I’m not voting for another CR again, but I keep voting for them because the outcome is worse with a shutdown,” Moran said. “But this just needs to be resolved in the House. I don’t think there’s a problem in the Senate that would cause a shutdown.”

Any short-term spending bill will have to be bipartisan in order to get through the Democratically controlled Senate where at least 60 votes are needed to limit debate on legislation. That could take more time than lawmakers have before Oct. 1, he said.

“Nothing about this is conducive to getting something done quickly and we’ve got to start with something that’s acceptable,” Moran said.

‘We’re in kind of a desperate situation’

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, said he’s unsure when the Senate would take up a short-term government funding bill since House Republicans haven’t announced what they’ll vote on or when they’ll vote to pass a CR.

“The House is a wreck and the speaker doesn’t appear to have a path using his majority to solve a serious national problem, so we’re in kind of a desperate situation,” Durbin said.

The House Appropriations Committee has approved 10 of its 12 spending bills for the fiscal year slated to begin Oct. 1, but the House has approved just one of those so far. All of the bills are partisan and written below the spending levels that McCarthy and President Joe Biden agreed to in the debt limit law.

The Senate spending panel has approved all dozen of its annual bills on broadly bipartisan votes, though efforts to pass a three-bill spending package halted last week after Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson objected to leaders scheduling amendment votes. 

The biggest hurdle for Congress at the moment is gaining support for the continuing resolution that would extend government funding past the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. That short-term spending bill is regularly relied on to give the House and Senate more time to negotiate final versions of the dozen annual spending bills.

Failing to approve a short-term spending bill before the start of fiscal 2024 on Oct. 1. would begin a funding lapse, leading wide swaths of the federal government to shut down.

‘If we don’t get the aid, we will lose the war’: Zelenskyy asks Congress to help Ukraine

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 21: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (L) (R-KY) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (R) (D-NY) walk with President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky (C) at the U.S. Capitol Building on September 21, 2023 in Washington, DC. Schumer said that Zelensky told him, "if we don’t get the aid, we will lose the war." (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Thursday traveled to Capitol Hill to meet with lawmakers to reiterate the need for continued aid to support his country’s fight against the Russian invasion, even as the U.S. faces a partial government shutdown as soon as the end of the month.

“If we don’t get the aid, we will lose the war,” Zelenskyy said to senators, according to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

There’s bipartisan support in the Senate to approve the White House request for $24 billion in supplemental aid to Ukraine, including from top Senate appropriators. However, some Republican senators are lukewarm, and others are firmly opposed. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has not openly expressed support as he grapples with gaining enough votes from his party to avoid a shutdown.

“It is very clear that if we were to have a government shutdown or pass a CR without Ukrainian aid, the damage that would occur on Ukraine’s campaign would be devastating,” Schumer, a New York Democrat, said.

CR refers to a continuing resolution, the name for the short-term government funding bill that lawmakers must pass to give themselves more time to pass the full-year spending bills.

U.S. House Republicans are currently struggling to produce and pass a short-term plan to fund the government past the end of the month. If a stopgap spending bill is not passed by the Sept. 30 deadline, then a partial shutdown will commence.   

Congress was not Zelenskyy’s only stop while in Washington. He met with President Joe Biden and U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin.

During an open-press portion of his meeting with Zelenskyy, Biden excoriated Russia for aggressing on its neighbor, commended Ukraine’s response and committed further U.S. security and humanitarian aid to Ukraine.

Biden announced the next tranche of military aid, comprising artillery, ammunition, anti-tank weapons, and the first U.S. Abrams tanks to be sent to Ukraine. The U.S. president said he was confident Congress would fund further aid.

“I’m counting on the good judgment of the United States Congress,” he said in response to a reporter’s question following the meeting. “There’s no alternative.”

Zelenskyy thanked Biden, Congress and the American people for their solidarity over the 575 days of the war.

He told Biden the new defense package “has exactly what our soldiers need.”

The Ukrainian president said he would soon announce a new agreement that would boost his country’s defense capabilities.

Following an earlier Thursday meeting with Zelenskyy, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul, a Texas Republican, said during a press conference that Congress should specify the specific weapons that Zelenskyy asked for in the $24 billion supplemental funding bill, such as F-16 jets and long-range artillery.

“This man has moral courage and moral clarity,” McCaul said of Zelenskyy. “The will of the Ukrainian people is far stronger than the will of the Russians.”

McCaul said that McCarthy is supportive of sending aid to Ukraine. McCaul said he believes McCarthy can get more Republicans on board.

Zelenskyy described his meetings with members of both parties in Congress as “frank, constructive dialogue,” according to a pool report.

Vance leads letter of opposition

After a Wednesday closed-door Senate briefing about Ukraine, more than two dozen Republican lawmakers sent a letter to the White House opposing any more funding.

Ohio GOP Sen. J.D. Vance posted the letter to X, formerly known as Twitter, that was signed by 28 Republicans.

“Yesterday at a classified briefing over Ukraine, it became clear that America is being asked to fund an indefinite conflict with unlimited resources. Enough is enough. To these and future requests, my colleagues and I say: NO,” according to the letter.

Those GOP senators who signed onto the letter include Vance, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Mike Braun of Indiana, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, Mike Lee of Utah and Roger Marshall of Kansas. About two dozen members of the U.S. House signed the letter, none from Georgia’s delegation.

House Republicans and a handful of Senate Republicans who did not sign the letter have also been critical about overall government spending and providing additional support for Ukraine.

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, said he is opposed to approving aid to Ukraine because he doesn’t see Ukraine defeating Russia anytime soon.

“It sounds to me like this is a stalemate,” he said. “What’s our plan? What are we going to do? Are we just going to spend hundreds of billions indefinitely? What is the plan here? I just don’t know.”

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican, was not moved.

“What you’d expect,” he said. “It’s the same points being made, there’s nothing particularly new.”

However, U.S. Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota said that Zelenskyy “struck a very bipartisan note.”

“His main message was one of gratitude for the help that the United States (has) provided to Ukraine and … ask that we continue that support so that Russia doesn’t overrun Ukraine,” Smith said.

$24 billion request

The White House is asking for Congress to approve $24 billion for several types of aid to Ukraine.

The request asks Congress to provide $13.1 billion for the Defense Department, $8.5 billion for the State Department and USAID, $2.3 billion for the Treasury Department, $100 million for the Department of Health and Human Services and $68 million for the Energy Department.

Top Senate appropriators Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington, and Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, both said they believe Ukraine should receive aid.

Collins said she asked Zelenskyy what would be the impact if Ukraine only received military aid rather than economic and humanitarian aid.

“He explained that all of their budget is going to aid their soldiers and sailors and that if they did not get the humanitarian and economic aid, they would lose their school teachers, their health care professionals would leave, and … additional people would literally die,” Collins said.

In a statement, Murray said that Ukraine’s defense against Russia is at a critical point.

“[I]t’s so important that Congress continues our strong and bipartisan support for Ukraine, so they have the resources and weapons they need to defend themselves against Putin’s invasion,” she said.

Congress has approved four aid packages for Ukraine since the war began in February of last year, totaling $110 billion.

The first aid package was approved in March 2022 and included $13.6 billion. The second assistance package was approved in May 2022 and provided $40 billion, and the third relief package was approved in September 2022 for more than $12 billion. A fourth supplemental package was approved in December 2022 for $45 billion.

McConnell: ‘Support for Ukraine is not charity’

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, has pressed for additional military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine to help bolster democracy in Eastern Europe.

“At the risk of repeating myself, American support for Ukraine is not charity,” McConnell said in a statement. “It’s an investment in our own direct interests — not least because degrading Russia’s military power helps to deter our primary strategic adversary, China.”

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a senior GOP member on the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, said that Zelenskyy laid out to senators what would happen if U.S. support were to vanish.

“Russia would make very substantial gains,” he said.

U.S. Democratic Sens. Tim Kaine of Virginia and Ron Wyden of Oregon said Zelenskyy’s meeting showed how this is a pivotal moment.

“He did a very, very good job of explaining what the stakes are for Ukraine, for Europe, and for the democracies of the world if you allow an authoritarian to get away with it,” Kaine said.  “He also pointed out that actually giving into Putin is the thing that creates the forever war.”

U.S. Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey said Zelenskyy made a “very urgent case for the United States to stay engaged and to continue with support.”

Pentagon spokesman Brigadier Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters Thursday that the Defense Department will continue to seek bipartisan support for Ukraine aid in Congress.

“It’s important, again, to re-emphasize why Ukraine matters,” he said. “In addition to helping our Ukrainian partners to defend themselves from unprovoked aggression, the implications, not only on European security, but also on U.S. and international security are very stark … If Russia were to succeed in eliminating Ukraine as a nation, they won’t stop there.”

Making school bomb shelters more comfortable

Ukrainian First Lady Olena Zelenska was also in Washington, where she visited students, faculty and staff at Georgetown University.

She spoke about the ways education has been affected by the conflict, with young children spending their first day of school learning in bomb shelters.

“I’m looking at you and I can see our students,” Zelenska said. “I don’t think you are that different. And you have one particular trait in common, that’s caring and empathy and wanting to change things for the better.”

She said that her foundation in Ukraine has three priority areas: humanitarian assistance, support for education and support for health care. One of the foundation’s projects is aimed at making bomb shelters for schools in Ukraine more comfortable. So far, eight schools are part of the program.

“If there is no bomb shelter in a school, children cannot attend it, school will just not open, so a lot of children do distance learning,” Zelenska said.

Zelenska was presented with the Hillary Clinton Award for advancing women, peace and security. She was awarded this recognition virtually last year.

Zelenska stressed that if her country were to be defeated, it would not just impact Ukraine and its people, but threaten everyone.

“If you have power, if you have opportunities and resources, you can do anything you want,” Zelenska said. “You can be a tyrant, you can seize other countries, other territories, and then these situations mean that no one is safe in this world.”

“To turn a blind eye means to turn your back to your own future,” she said.

Samantha Dietel, Jennifer Shutt and Jacob Fischler contributed to this report.

TFS splits with Hab in home finale

Reilly Cox (Austin Poffenberger)

The TFS middle school tennis teams took on Habersham Thursday evening in the last home match of the season.

Prior to the match, the 8th-graders of the team were honored for their contributions to the team. After that, the boys earned a 4-1 win, while the Lady Indians lost 0-5.

The boys’ one loss came in a doubles tiebreak set that was fought to the very end.

The Indians are now 8-0 overall, and the Lady Indians are now 1-7.

TFS Indians W 4-1 vs Habersham

#1 Singles: Reilly Cox W 8-5 (6-2)
#2 Singles: Elijah Pinney W 8-2 (7-1)
#3 Singles: Jackson Davis W 8-4 (7-1)
#1 Doubles: Christian David/Fenn NeSmith W 8-4 (7-1)
#2 Doubles: Dylan Johnson/Maddox English L 8-9 (2-1)

TFS Lady Indians L 0-5 vs Habersham

#1 Singles: Emma Ivester L 0-8 (1-7)
#2 Singles: Gabriella Oliver L 0-8 (0-3)
#3 Singles: Lexi Gibson L 3-8 (1-5)
#1 Doubles: Elizabeth Stafford/Veronica VerBerkmoes L 2-8 (0-1)
#2 Doubles: Erin Sweat/Tara Shyrock L 7-9 (0-1)